Calif. AG Announces Arrest of ‘Revenge Porn’ Site Operator

I may just post naked pictures of myself and demand other people pay me to take it down.In October, California

outlawed
“revenge porn,” the act of posting what had once been
private naked pictures of former partners online for the purpose of
humiliating him or her (generally “her”).

Today California Attorney General Kamala Harris announced the
arrest of a revenge porn site operator, though the charges are
actually separate and more extensive than the state’s new law. From
Harris’
own site
:

Attorney General Kamala D. Harris today announced the arrest of
the alleged owner and operator of a revenge porn website who
facilitated the posting of more than 10,000 sexually explicit
photos and extorted victims for as much as $350 each to remove the
illicit content.

“This website published intimate photos of unsuspecting victims
and turned their public humiliation and betrayal into a commodity
with the potential to devastate lives,” Attorney General Harris
said. “Online predators that profit from the extortion of private
photos will be investigated and prosecuted for this reprehensible
and illegal internet activity.”

Kevin Christopher Bollaert, 27, of San Diego, was arrested today
in San Diego by California Department of Justice agents and is
being held in San Diego County jail on $50,000 bail. According to
documents filed in San Diego County Superior Court, Bollaert has
been charged with 31 felony counts of conspiracy, identity theft
and extortion and is facing possible jail time and fines.

What made Bollaert’s site different from some others is that it
“required that the poster include the subject’s full name,
location, age and Facebook profile link.” He is then accused of
setting up a second separate site to charge hundreds of dollars
from victims of the first site in order to get their pictures taken
down.

In October, after the California law had been passed, Jerry
Brito
examined
the problems of privacy rights colliding with free
speech rights in efforts to block revenge porn.

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from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/10/calif-ag-announces-arrest-of-revenge-por
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Bipartisan Budget Deal Reached, Avoiding January 15 Government Shutdown

Moments ago, news hit that democrat negotiators Patty Murray, and republican Paul Ryan reached a bipartisan deal to ease the automatic budget cuts by $60b. The deal calls for auctioning of govt airwaves, increased premiums for pensions backed by PBGC, a congressional aide told Bloomberg’s Heidi Przybyla. A press conference will be held at 6pm to unveil the bipartisan budget agreement, according to e-mailed statement. As a result, a January 15 government shutdown will be avoided.

More from NBC:

Negotiations on Capitol Hill have yielded a modest budget agreement to ease automatic spending cuts and replace some of them with savings from future-year cuts.

 

Details on the pact by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan and Senate Budget Committee Chairman Patty Murray were to be announced by the duo Tuesday evening.

 

The agreement would ease the harshest spending cuts set to strike the Pentagon and domestic agencies for a second year.

 

It would require federal workers to contribute more to their pensions, increase premiums on companies whose pension plans are insured by the federal government and increase security fees paid by airline travelers.

 

The pact by Ryan and Murray comes after several failed attempts at broader budget pacts


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/kM8pJDbcc4E/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Worst. Congress. Ever

Despite rumors of a 'deal', "The major issues that we think are necessary to jump-start the American economy continue to languish," reflects one lobbyist on what Bloomberg reports will be Congress's least productive year ever, with just 56 pieces of legislation signed into law so far. The former record low, reached in 1995, was 88 new laws. 2013 was supposed to be the year lawmakers, free of immediate election pressures, would revamp U.S. immigration policy, pass a debt-lowering budget and expedite a pair of trade deals. Instead, partisan rancor grew deeper; and to make matters worse, the politicians took plenty of time off – the House has been out 191 days, and the Senate 199 days.

 

 

Via Bloomberg,

Business Roundtable lobbyists wanted 2013 to be the year lawmakers, free of immediate election pressures, would revamp U.S. immigration policy, pass a debt-lowering budget and expedite a pair of trade deals.

 

Instead, Congress is on pace to have its least productive year ever, with just 56 pieces of legislation signed into law so far. The former record low, reached in 1995, was 88 new laws.

 

 

The reasons are many. Partisan rancor grew deeper as a result of the government shutdown. Elected officials in both parties fretted about primaries for party loyalists who would accuse them of abandoning party principles.

 

 

“There was a time not long ago that gridlock was seen as a positive for the economy and for industry,” Yardeni said. “Gridlock was a sign of success in our political system, because it showed the system was in balance. But now the factions are so far apart and their differences so irreconcilable that it’s creating problems for the economy.”

 

After three years of standoffs over the budget and the U.S. deficit, negotiators are now eying only a limited plan to ease some of the automatic cuts next year. That deal wouldn’t end uncertainty for holders of U.S. debt and for businesses, Yardeni said.

 

 

2013 is shaping up to be a year that will be remembered for roadblocks and delays in Congress, punctuated by occasional half-steps.

 

Scores of measures were put off, including a reauthorization of the Amtrak passenger rail system, and not a single annual appropriations bill was completed. If the annual defense authorization bill isn’t acted on this year, it will be the first time ever.

 

 

While Obama’s approval ratings are near record lows, the public’s view of Congress is at rock bottom.

 

A November 7-10 Gallup Poll found that Americans’ approval of the way Congress is handling its job dropped to 9 percent, the lowest in the polling firm’s 39-year history of asking the question. The poll of 1,039 U.S. adults had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/jZ6–grAjiI/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Chicago E-Cigarette Ban Blocked by 'Surprise Opposition'

The Chicago Sun-Times reports
that “a surprise outpouring of opposition” has blocked passage of a

bill
supported by Mayor Rahm Emanuel that would have treated
electronic cigarettes like tobacco products. Among other things,
that would have meant a ban on vaping in bars, restaurants, and
other “public places”—a measure New York City also is
considering
. Opponents of the Chicago ordinance noted the
dearth of evidence that e-cigarettes pose a threat to bystanders
(or to vapers themselves) and argued that it was unfair to pressure
smokers into quitting (through a new tax hike, among other
policies) and then attack a product that could help them do so.

“We’re punishing a group of people for trying not to smoke,”
Alderwoman Leslie Hairston said at meeting of the Chicago City
Council’s health committee yesterday. “You can’t have it both ways.
You can’t on one day say, ‘We’re going to tax the heck out of
cigarettes,’ then the next day [say], ‘For those of you who can’t
afford it and decide you want to smoke vapor, we’re going to decide
you can’t do that, either.'” Another member of the city council,
Brendan Reilly, took a puff on an e-cigarette during the meeting,
saying he is in midst of switching from smoking to
vaping. 

[Thanks to David Wegener for the tip.]

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/10/chicago-e-cigarette-ban-blocked-by-surpr
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Chicago E-Cigarette Ban Blocked by ‘Surprise Opposition’

The Chicago Sun-Times reports
that “a surprise outpouring of opposition” has blocked passage of a

bill
supported by Mayor Rahm Emanuel that would have treated
electronic cigarettes like tobacco products. Among other things,
that would have meant a ban on vaping in bars, restaurants, and
other “public places”—a measure New York City also is
considering
. Opponents of the Chicago ordinance noted the
dearth of evidence that e-cigarettes pose a threat to bystanders
(or to vapers themselves) and argued that it was unfair to pressure
smokers into quitting (through a new tax hike, among other
policies) and then attack a product that could help them do so.

“We’re punishing a group of people for trying not to smoke,”
Alderwoman Leslie Hairston said at meeting of the Chicago City
Council’s health committee yesterday. “You can’t have it both ways.
You can’t on one day say, ‘We’re going to tax the heck out of
cigarettes,’ then the next day [say], ‘For those of you who can’t
afford it and decide you want to smoke vapor, we’re going to decide
you can’t do that, either.'” Another member of the city council,
Brendan Reilly, took a puff on an e-cigarette during the meeting,
saying he is in midst of switching from smoking to
vaping. 

[Thanks to David Wegener for the tip.]

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/10/chicago-e-cigarette-ban-blocked-by-surpr
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Is The Deficit Reduction Just A Mirage?

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/wnJ91TM6euk/story01.htm Tyler Durden

"Save Airbnb in New York!" Activist Group Delivers Petition With 230,000+ Signatures

A delegation of thirty-six pro-Airbnb activists dropped by the
office of New
York State Senator Liz Krueger (D)
this Pro-Airbnb Activists drop off a petition with NY State Sen. Liz Krueger ||| Photo by David Medeiros, courtesy of Peers.afternoon to deliver a petition
with over 230,000 signatures asking that she help make it
explicitly legal for New Yorkers to rent out their spare rooms
through the popular short-term
rental site
. The group then broke off into groups and met with
Krueger Chief of Staff Brad Usher, who displayed some
“defensiveness,” according to one participant, but said that the
senator would be open to “looking at the law.”

Sen. Krueger sponsored a 2010
bill
to make it illegal for landlords to rent their apartments
through sites like Airbnb. The city’s administrative code allows
individuals to rent rooms in their apartments on a short-term
basis, but only if they’re at home at the same time as their
guests. The law is also ambiguous on several points, including
whether Airbnb hosts are responsible for collecting hotel taxes—an
issue that became a cause for alarm when New York State The group is greeted by Brad Usher, Sen. Krueger's chief of staff ||| Photo by David Medeiros, courtesy of Peers.Attorney General Eric
Schneiderman issued a subpoena in October, requiring Airbnb to hand
over a detailed list of all its hosts statewide, their bookings,
and how much money they’ve earned.

Krueger press officer Andrew Goldston says the senator “is
always open to having discussions about improving the law.” 
But recently Krueger took a hard line against Airbnb,
stating
that the company is putting New Yorkers “in the line of
fire by recruiting them to feed its business model and participate
in what is essentially a black market.” While “some may call that
‘paradigm-breaking’ or ‘disruptive’,” Krueger said, “ultimately,
it’s just irresponsible and greedy.”

The petition drive is part of
a week of activism
aimed at liberalizing the laws governing
short-term rentals in New York City, which is spearheaded by
Peers, a self-described
“member-driven organization that supports the sharing economy
movement.” The group recently played a pivotal role in defeating a
bill in Grand Rapids, Michigan that would have made it a
misdemeanor for residents to advertise on Airbnb.

I wrote about
New York’s Petty War on Airbnb
for The Daily Beast in
October, and Naomi Brockwell and I covered the story
for Reason TV:

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/10/save-airbnb-in-new-york-activist-group-d
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“Save Airbnb in New York!” Activist Group Delivers Petition With 230,000+ Signatures

A delegation of thirty-six pro-Airbnb activists dropped by the
office of New
York State Senator Liz Krueger (D)
this Pro-Airbnb Activists drop off a petition with NY State Sen. Liz Krueger ||| Photo by David Medeiros, courtesy of Peers.afternoon to deliver a petition
with over 230,000 signatures asking that she help make it
explicitly legal for New Yorkers to rent out their spare rooms
through the popular short-term
rental site
. The group then broke off into groups and met with
Krueger Chief of Staff Brad Usher, who displayed some
“defensiveness,” according to one participant, but said that the
senator would be open to “looking at the law.”

Sen. Krueger sponsored a 2010
bill
to make it illegal for landlords to rent their apartments
through sites like Airbnb. The city’s administrative code allows
individuals to rent rooms in their apartments on a short-term
basis, but only if they’re at home at the same time as their
guests. The law is also ambiguous on several points, including
whether Airbnb hosts are responsible for collecting hotel taxes—an
issue that became a cause for alarm when New York State The group is greeted by Brad Usher, Sen. Krueger's chief of staff ||| Photo by David Medeiros, courtesy of Peers.Attorney General Eric
Schneiderman issued a subpoena in October, requiring Airbnb to hand
over a detailed list of all its hosts statewide, their bookings,
and how much money they’ve earned.

Krueger press officer Andrew Goldston says the senator “is
always open to having discussions about improving the law.” 
But recently Krueger took a hard line against Airbnb,
stating
that the company is putting New Yorkers “in the line of
fire by recruiting them to feed its business model and participate
in what is essentially a black market.” While “some may call that
‘paradigm-breaking’ or ‘disruptive’,” Krueger said, “ultimately,
it’s just irresponsible and greedy.”

The petition drive is part of
a week of activism
aimed at liberalizing the laws governing
short-term rentals in New York City, which is spearheaded by
Peers, a self-described
“member-driven organization that supports the sharing economy
movement.” The group recently played a pivotal role in defeating a
bill in Grand Rapids, Michigan that would have made it a
misdemeanor for residents to advertise on Airbnb.

I wrote about
New York’s Petty War on Airbnb
for The Daily Beast in
October, and Naomi Brockwell and I covered the story
for Reason TV:

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/10/save-airbnb-in-new-york-activist-group-d
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Matthew Feeney Discusses Scrapping the Welfare State and Giving People Free Money on Wisconsin Public Radio

I will be on Wisconsin Public Radio at at
5:45pm ET talking about
my article
on the guaranteed national income where I argued
that giving everyone free money is preferable to the welfare system
currently in place. 

Listen live here.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/10/matthew-feeney-discusses-scrapping-the-w
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Thank you, church musicians

Yes, as Christmas approaches, let’s take a moment to stop and thank all of you church musicians for all the wonderful blessings you add to our celebration of Christ’s birth. Without the music of the faith which you bring us, we surely confess that the season would be something far less meaningful than it is. And certainly you bless us all year long in every season and occasion with your precious gifts of sacred music.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/blogs/justin-kollmeyer/12-10-2013/thank-you-church-musicians